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Trillion Trees: Reducing Wildfire Risk, Protecting People and Wildlife

August 27, 2020 Aurora Cutler, Office of Sustainability and Climate, USDA Forest Service

An opaque, autumn haze smothers much of the western United States from the millions of acres burning across forests in the Sierra Nevada and Rocky Mountains. Fire size and severity are rising in tandem with record heat, low winter snowpack, decreased summer rains, and abundant forest fuels...

Forestry

An Important Action to Take: Check Your Trees!

August 24, 2020 Jeffrey Davidson, Commodity Specialist for Forest Products, USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

Did you know that USDA has declared August as Tree Check Month? That’s because August is the peak time of year to spot the Asian longhorned beetle (ALB)—an invasive wood-boring beetle that attacks 12 types of hardwood trees in North America, such as maples, elms, horse chestnuts, birches and willows...

Animals Forestry

Promoting Pollinators with Agroforestry

August 20, 2020 Gary Bentrup, Research and Development, USDA Forest Service

Plant pollination by animals is critical for healthy ecosystems and an estimated 85% of the world’s flowering plants depend on animals, mostly insects, like bees, for pollination.

Forestry

Shared Stewardship Project Protects Mountaintop Village

August 14, 2020 Heidi Schewel, Office of Communication, USDA Forest Service

Just outside of Coronado National Forest in southeastern Arizona, the mountaintop village of Summerhaven can breathe a sigh of relief. Thanks to the cooperation of the Forest Service, the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the State of Arizona through shared stewardship, Summerhaven was able to avoid the...

Forestry

Honoring the History and Value of Grazing on the National Forests and Grasslands

August 07, 2020 Casey Johnson, Forest Management, Rangeland Management and Vegetation Ecology, USDA Forest Service

Domestic livestock have been grazing on western landscapes for centuries. The USDA Forest Service has worked alongside farmers and ranchers to manage those landscapes, which were rapidly degrading from overuse by the time the agency was formed in 1905.

Forestry